MEMORANDUM OPINION
These consolidated causes are claims for workers’ compensation benefits under Alabama law. The court has diversity jurisdiction over these claims pursuant to 28 U.S. C.A. § 1382. Based on the evidence presented at a nonjury trial, the court finds that these claims are due to be granted and benefits awarded. The court also considers and grants one of the plaintiffs’ counsel’s motion for the court to enter judgment nunc pro tunc.
I.
Plaintiffs Marion F. Middleton, Lonnie Hilliard, Zack Schofield, Eunice McCoy, and Clifton Smith, all former cotton textile workers, have brought these lawsuits pursuant to 1975 Ala.Code §§ 25-5-1 through 25-5-231 against Dan River Mills, Inc., their former employer. From 1955 until 1982, Dan River operated a cotton textile mill in Greenville, Alabama. Built around 1928, the mill first belonged to Alabama Mills, Inc., from whom Dan River acquired it. The plaintiff cotton workers worked in this mill for periods varying from fifteen to fifty-one years, beginning in one instance at the age of fourteen and in others at the age of sixteen; some were employed at the mill all their working lives. Only one finished high school; the others can write only their names and cannot read.
Throughout their years at the mill, the cotton workers seldom changed jobs. One worked mostly in the card room, two in the spinning room, and two in the weave room. While one worked for some time as a shift supervisor, the others stayed in manual positions. When their employment ended, the cotton workers earned between four and seven dollars an hour. In late 1982, Dan River closed the mill due to decreased demand for the corduroy cloth it produced.
The cotton workers all claim that they suffer lung disease caused by their employment at Dan River’s Greenville mill. The issue for the court is whether the cotton workers have disabilities compensable under Alabama’s workers’ compensation law. The court must also determine whether four of the cotton workers may maintain their claims within the statute of limitations.
II.
Alabama’s courts have repeatedly stated, as recently expressed, that “[t]he workmen’s compensation laws are remedial in nature and are to be liberally construed and applied in order to effect their beneficent purposes.”
Hilyard Drilling Co., Inc. v. Janes,
*1209
There are several categories of job-related injuries or diseases for which Alabama’s law provides compensation. One such category of diseases is “occupational pneumoconiosis,” the subject of Article 5, 1975 Ala.Code §§ 25-5-140 through 25-5-152. This category does not refer to any single disease or finite set of diseases, but rather encompasses the range of impairments “caused by inhalation of minute particles of dust over a period of time.” § 25-5-140.
See Wilkins v. West Point-Pepperell, Inc.,
§ 25-5-141 sets forth two requirements for compensation for occupational pneumoconiosis or dust-induced disease. First, the employee must show that the industry in which he or she works presents a “particular hazard” of the disease “in excess” of what employment in general presents. This is the requirement of legal causation.
See Alatex, Inc. v. Couch,
A.
Again, “[t]o establish legal causation the employee must show that in the performance of her duties she was exposed to a danger or risk materially in excess of that to which people not so employed are exposed.”
Fordham v. Southern Phenix Textiles, Inc.,
This issue is one to which doctors and other scientists have devoted considerable study and debate for a long time. Within the last fifteen years, federal agencies and state courts, including Alabama’s, have also taken up the issue in establishing safety regulations and workers’ compensation programs. There is now a vast body of literature, primary and secondary, medical and legal, concerning the effects of cotton dust.
See, e.g., American Textile Manufacturers Institute, Inc. v. Donovan,
The evidence before the court includes much of this literature, as well as the testimony of several experts. The court’s findings rest on a review of all the extensive details in the evidence, although they only summarize these details. Also, while other courts and agencies have considered the issue of cotton dust’s effects, their findings are not conclusive since the issue is one of fact. Similarly, while much of the evidence deals with the merits and deficiencies of various studies of cotton dust, the court’s findings do not focus on the studies themselves and certainly do not rely on any single study.
The court considers the issue of cotton dust’s effects in three parts: first, whether cotton dust can cause lung disease; and, if *1210 so, second, what in cotton dust causes such lung disease; and, third, what signs there are that cotton dust has caused such lung disease. The court considers these parts of the issue in turn.
The evidence reflects general agreement that cotton dust can impair the lungs of some people in some way. Soon after beginning to work in a cotton mill, cotton workers may experience chest tightness and breathing difficulty. For some, the experience may be so debilitating that they must change jobs; others are able to keep working with discomfort. The evidence is that those cotton workers who stop being exposed to cotton dust soon after first experiencing chest tightness and breathing difficulty find that this trouble stops too.
There is also evidence that cotton workers who remain exposed to cotton dust over several years may develop further trouble that does not go away even after exposure to cotton dust stops. Along with the same chest tightness and breathing difficulty, such cotton workers, according to the evidence, suffer permanent damage to their lungs. 3
This evidence of permanent lung disease from exposure to cotton dust has existed for some time. Recently, some experts have criticized the way in which this evidence was gathered. In addition, some recent studies have cast doubt on cotton dust’s permanent effects, though not disproving them. However, experts have also criticized these recent studies for failing to account for changed conditions in cotton mills.
The nature of the evidence would suggest that there may never be a definitive medical determination of whether cotton dust can cause permanent lung disease. However, the cotton workers here need not establish the particular hazard of cotton dust definitively.
See Dan River Mills, Inc. v. Foshee,
Along these lines, the court finds that the cotton workers have proved by a preponderance of the evidence that exposure to cotton dust presents a particular hazard of lung disease in excess of employment in general. The court finds that cotton dust can cause permanent lung disease, as well as temporary impairment of breathing. Lung disease caused by exposure to cotton dust is thus an occupational pneumoconiosis, compensable according to 1975 Ala. Code § 25-5-141.
Again, the second part of the issue before the court is what it is about cotton dust that can cause lung disease. There appears to be some element in the cotton plant that, in particles too small to see, enters the lungs and damages them over time. This element, by all accounts, is not found in the cotton fibers themselves, but some other part of the plant, such as the leaves and the stem. Dust from the leaves and stem is called bract. There is considerable speculation that bract contains the harmful element in cotton dust; however, there is also speculation that bacteria found on cotton plants contain the element. Again, conclusive medical evidence is lacking.
On this basis, the court finds that there is at present insufficient evidence to attribute the harmful effects of cotton dust to any particular component of the cotton plant. Furthermore, it is unnecessary to pinpoint any such particular harmful com *1211 ponent of the cotton plant, since the signs of the harmful effects of exposure to cotton dust themselves are clear and specific. Indeed, attributing the lung disease caused by exposure to cotton dust to any particular component of the cotton plant risks denying compensation to cotton workers who show the signs of harmful effects, but were not exposed to the particular component. On the other hand, attributing the lung disease to exposure to cotton dust generally avoids this unfairness, since whether cotton workers show the signs of harmful effects can easily be determined. 4
Again, the third part of the issue before the court is what signs there are of the effects of cotton dust. The evidence reflects that the most characteristic signs are the feelings of chest tightness and breathing difficulty previously described. Again, these feelings may arise soon after cotton workers begin employment. In this early stage, cotton workers also may notice that the feelings are worse on the day after they return from the weekend or vacation. Similarly, they may notice that the feelings worsen over the course of the work day. Medical tests can measure this effect by giving cotton workers samples of cotton dust to breathe and noting any differences that result. These signs in the early stages of exposure are called acute responses, because again they cease if cotton workers stop breathing cotton dust.
If cotton workers continue breathing cotton dust, the signs of ill effects appear to change. The evidence is that after several years of exposure cotton workers feel the chest tightness and breathing difficulty equally throughout the day and the week. Furthermore, these feelings last even if cotton workers stop being exposed to cotton dust. For this reason, these are called chronic responses to cotton dust indicating permanent lung disease. Medical tests can measure such permanent lung disease as a decrease in the lungs’ ability to exhale. Also, there may be a measurable decrease in cotton workers’ ability to exercise, even to walk short distances or climb stairs.
The evidence also reflects that cotton workers who suffer permanent lung disease from exposure to cotton dust may or may not exhibit the early signs, i.e., acute responses. Each case will depend on how quickly and seriously the cotton dust affects the cotton worker’s lungs. Some cotton workers will suffer permanent lung disease and exhibit chronic responses, without ever having shown acute responses. Other cotton workers will exhibit some but not all of the acute responses, and then these responses may well disappear as the lung disease becomes permanent. Of course, some cotton workers will exhibit only acute responses and never develop permanent lung disease, and some cotton workers will never show any signs of exposure to cotton dust.
B.
Again, the second requirement of compensation for occupational pneumoconiosis is medical causation. Having shown that work conditions can cause disease, the employee must show that “the exposure to conditions was, in fact, a contributing cause of her injury.”
Fordham v. Southern Phenix Textiles, Inc.,
Here, there is little if any dispute that the cotton workers all suffer lung disease. Dan River contends that in all cases cigarette smoking, along with other factors in some cases, caused this disease. The cotton workers contend that exposure to cotton dust was a significant cause of their disease. The court will first review the facts common to all the cotton workers and then consider the case of each in turn.
The evidence reflects and the court finds that all the cotton workers were exposed to cotton dust, as previously defined. Since the cotton workers worked in different areas of the mill, the cotton dust they breathed may have varied to some extent. However, any such variation is insignificant.
All the cotton workers worked in the mill for at least fifteen years, some for much longer. According to the evidence, Dan River began measuring cotton dust levels in the mill and monitoring its employees’ lung conditions in the late 1970’s. Thus, the cotton workers all worked in the mill considerably before such clean-up measures commenced. They also all first experienced breathing difficulty before this time. All showed one or more signs of so-called acute responses to cotton dust, and all suffer measurable loss of their lungs’ ability to exhale. Finally, one or more doctors who examined them stated that exposure to cotton dust was a significant cause of their lung disease. Such evidence, if accepted, establishes medical causation under Alabama law.
See Alatex, Inc. v. Couch,
All the cotton workers also smoked for many years. The evidence reflects that cigarette smoking can cause lung disease. Indeed, the evidence was that cigarette smoking and exposure to cotton dust may affect the lungs in the same way and to the same extent. Thus, that the cotton workers’ lungs suffered from their smoking does not mean that they also did not suffer from exposure to cotton dust, and may well mean that they did. In
Taylor v. United States Steel Corp.,
Marion F. Middleton
Middleton worked at Dan River from 1967 until 1982, primarily in the weave room. He began experiencing breathing difficulty in the mid-1970’s. The evidence reflects that Middleton noticed his breathing as worse after he returned to work from the weekend and also showed sensitivity to cotton dust. He also smoked cigarettes for many years.
Several doctors examined Middleton, and all agreed that he has lung disease, most considering it severe. Two stated that exposure to cotton dust was a significant *1213 cause of this disease, and another said that it may have been a contributory factor. On-this basis, the court finds that Middleton’s lung disease “arose out of and in the course of the employment” at Dan River. Therefore, Middleton suffers an occupational pneumoconiosis compensable according to 1975 Ala.Code § 25-5-141.
Lonnie Hilliard
Hilliard is now deceased. He worked at the Greenville mill from 1929 until 1980, primarily in the spinning room. He first noticed breathing difficulty in the early 1970’s. The evidence reflects that Hilliard’s breathing worsened during the work day. He also smoked cigarettes for many years.
Of several doctors who examined Hilliard, all agreed that he had severe lung disease. Two stated that exposure to cotton dust was a significant cause of this disease, and another could not exclude it as a contributory cause. On this basis, the court finds that Hilliard’s lung disease “arose out of and in the course of the employment” at Dan River. Therefore, Hilliard suffered an occupational pneumoconiosis compensable according to 1975 Ala.Code § 25-5-141.
Zack Schofield
Schofield worked at Dan River from 1962 until 1980, as well as some time before that at the mill, primarily in the weave room. He first began experiencing breathing difficulty in the mid-1970’s. The evidence reflects that Schofield showed sensitivity to cotton dust. He also smoked cigarettes for many years.
Again, several doctors agreed that Schofield has severe lung disease. Two said that exposure to cotton dust was a significant cause of this disease, while another could not rule it out as a contributory cause. On this basis, the court finds that Schofield’s lung disease “arose out of and in the course of the employment” at Dan River. Therefore, Schofield has an occupational pneumoconiosis compensable according to 1975 Ala.Code § 25-5-141.
Eunice McCoy
McCoy worked at the Greenville mill from 1934 until 1982, primarily in the weave room. She first noticed breathing difficulty in the early 1970’s. The evidence reflects that McCoy noticed her chest tightness and breathing difficulty as worse after the weekend or vacation. McCoy also smoked cigarettes for many years and has a serious heart condition.
The doctors who examined McCoy agreed that she has lung disease, two calling it moderate and another moderately severe. Two doctors said that exposure to cotton dust was a significant cause of McCoy’s lung disease, and her heart disease appears to have contributed too. On this basis, the court finds that McCoy’s lung disease “arose out of and in the course of the employment” at Dan River. Therefore, McCoy has an occupational pneumoconiosis compensable according to 1975 Ala.Code § 25-5-141.
Clifton Smith
Smith worked at the Greenville mill from 1947 until 1982, primarily in the card room. He first noticed breathing difficulty in the early 1970’s. The evidence reflects that at first he noticed this difficulty as worse after returning from the weekend or vacation. Smith also smoked cigarettes for many years, and he too has a heart condition, related to a hormonal disorder.
Doctors who examined Smith stated that he has moderately severe lung disease, a significant cause of which was exposure to cotton dust, according to two. Smith's heart condition may have contributed too. On this basis, the court finds that Smith’s lung disease “arose out of and in the course of the employment” at Dan River. Therefore, Smith suffers an occupational pneumoconiosis compensable according to 1975 Ala.Code § 25-5-141.
III.
Having found that the cotton workers have compensable diseases, the court must determine first the extent of their disabilities and then the corresponding *1214 rates of their compensation. 1975 Ala. Code § 25-5-149 refers to Article 3 of the workers’ compensation law for this purpose. § 25-5-57 of this article sets forth a compensation schedule by which the court must determine whether the cotton workers have partial or total and temporary or permanent disabilities.
A.
The key to the extent of disability is the employee’s ability to earn a living.
Lankford v. International Paper Co.,
In
City of Muscle Shoals v. Davis,
In
Hyster Co. v. Chandler,
Marion F. Middleton
Middleton is 58 years old and has an eleventh-grade education. His work at Dan River involved only manual labor; besides this work, Middleton served as a cook in the army, a truck driver and a store manager.
The medical evidence was that Middleton is totally impaired as a result of his lung disease and also suffers hypertension. On this basis, the court finds that Middleton is unable to earn a living and thus is permanently and totally disabled.
Lonnie Hilliard
At his death, Hilliard was 70 years old, had a second-grade education and could not read or write. His work at Dan River involved only manual labor and, except for a few months he spent at a shipyard, took up all his working life.
The medical evidence was that Hilliard was totally impaired as a result of his lung disease. On this basis, the court finds that Hilliard was unable to earn a living and thus was permanently and totally disabled.
Zack Schofield
Schofield is 59 years old, has a fourth-grade education and cannot read or write. His work at Dan River involved only manual labor, and, besides this, he worked in a factory and on a farm.
The medical evidence was that Schofield is totally impaired as a result of his lung disease and also suffers hypertension. On this basis, the court finds that Schofield is unable to earn a living and thus is permanently and totally disabled.
Eunice McCoy
McCoy is 67 years old and has a high school education. Her work at Dan River involved only manual labor and took up all her working life.
The medical evidence was that McCoy is partially impaired as a result of her lung disease. She also suffers heart and brain *1215 disease. On this basis, the court finds that McCoy is unable to earn a living and thus is permanently and totally disabled.
Dan River contends that it cannot be held liable for the full extent of McCoy’s disability, because it is partly due to her heart and brain disease which are unrelated to her employment. This contention is meritless.
1975 Ala.Code § 25-5-58 excuses the employer from liability for that “degree or duration of disability ... increased or prolonged because of a preexisting injury.”
6
However, “[i]t is a fundamental principle that the employer takes the employee subject to his physical condition when he enters his employment.”
Allen v. Metro Contract Services, Inc.,
Here, the date of McCoy’s injury, according to 1975 Ala.Code § 25-5-147, was when she was last exposed to cotton dust, her last day of work in 1982. There is no evidence before the court that McCoy’s heart or brain disease had an apparent physical effect on her ability to work at that time. Therefore, the court finds that Dan River is liable for the full extent of her disability.
See Ex Parte Lewis,
Clifton Smith
Smith is 61 years old, has a seventh-grade education and cannot read or write. His work at Dan River mostly involved manual labor, although he worked for some time as a shift supervisor.
The medical evidence was that Smith is partially impaired as a result of his lung disease. He also suffers a hormonal disorder, heart disease and blindness in one eye. On this basis, the court finds that Smith is unable to earn a living and thus is permanently and totally disabled.
Dan River does not contend that it cannot be liable for the full extent of Smith’s disability. Moreover, the evidence reflects and the court finds that Smith’s other ailments had no apparent physical effect on his ability to work on the day he was last exposed to cotton dust. Therefore, Dan River is liable for the full extent of Smith’s disability.
B.
According, to 1975 Ala.Code § 25-5-57, employees with permanent and total disabilities are entitled to receive weekly compensation from the date of their injuries until either the end of their disabilities or their deaths. The rate of compensation is set at two-thirds of the employees’ average weekly earnings during the last year they worked, with a maximum rate of two thirds and a minimum rate of one quarter of the average weekly wage of the state at the date of injury. 1975 Ala.Code § 25-5-68. Again, here, the date of injury is the date of last exposure to cotton dust. 1975 Ala. Code § 25-5-147.
Applying these provisions, the court finds that the cotton workers are entitled to compensation at the following weekly rates: Marion F. Middleton, $143.55; Lonnie Hilliard, $148; Zack Schofield, $135.87; Eunice McCoy, $103.62; Clifton Smith, *1216 $174. 7 The court will award the cotton workers future benefits at these rates.
The cotton workers are also entitled to receive benefits that have accrued since they last worked at Dan River according to these weekly rates. The court will determine the amounts of these benefits only after giving the parties an opportunity to agree on them.
The cotton workers also seek an award of attorney fees according to 1975 Ala. Code § 25-5-90 with any prospective amount awarded in a present value lump sum.
See Fruehauf Corp. v. Keenum,
IV.
The final issue before the court is whether the claims of four of the cotton workers are barred by the statute of limitations. The court finds that they are not.
According to 1975 Ala.Code § 25-5-147, an employee must file a claim for compensation for occupational pneumoconiosis within one year of “the date of the last exposure to the hazards of the disease____” Nevertheless, there are two ways by which the running of the statute of limitations may be tolled: fraudulent concealment and false representation. In
Dorsey v. U.S. Pipe & Foundry Co.,
where the acts of the employer either falsely misrepresent to the employee or fraudulently conceal from him the truth of the facts upon which the liability of the employer depends, the running of the statute of limitations may be tolled, and it is immaterial whether the employee relies upon actual fraud or mere estoppel.
Id.
at 803;
see also Ex Parte Youngblood,
To establish fraudulent concealment, an employee must prove four facts: (1) that the employer knew or should have known that the employee was suffering from a disease or infirmed condition; (2) that the employer knew or should have known that the employee did not know of this disease or condition; (3) that the employee did not have reason to understand either the nature and gravity of the condition or its relation to the employment; and (4) that the employer failed to disclose to the employee the nature and extent of the employee’s condition.
Belser v. American Cast Iron Pipe Co., Inc.,
False representation, on the other hand, is an issue of whether the employer is “primarily responsible” for the employee’s delay in filing the claim.
Ex Parte Youngblood,
Here, Hilliard, Schofield and McCoy concede that they filed their claims late. The court thus considers whether Dan River’s conduct warrants tolling of the limitation, looking first to the facts common to the cotton workers and then to their individual circumstances. Finally, the court considers whether Smith’s claim was filed late and is barred.
As previously noted, Dan River has employed the cotton workers for most and in some cases all of their working lives. Throughout this time, the cotton workers almost exclusively performed manual labor. In addition, they remained functionally illiterate with one exception. To the court’s observation at trial, the confusion and intimidation attendant to these circumstances were palpable.
In the early and mid-1970’s, the cotton workers began noticing chest tightness and breathing difficulty. In the late 1970’s, Dan River began operating a medical department to monitor the health of its employees. In December 1979, it sent some of its employees for further examinations to a doctor in Birmingham, Alabama. After these examinations, the doctor sent reports to Dan River which gave them to at least some of the cotton workers, as well as sending them to some of their personal physicians.
In the summer of 1983, the Brown Lung Association, an organization apparently devoted to the interests of cotton workers, sent representatives to the Greenville area. The plaintiff cotton workers all participated in this visit. These lawsuits ensued.
On this basis, the court makes the following additional findings of fact and notes the following additional principles of law. First, Dan River knew or should have known that exposure to cotton dust can cause permanent lung disease. As stated, the evidence of such disease has existed for some time. While recently disputed, this evidence is substantial. Dan River took steps, to monitor its employees’ health in response to such evidence, and defended against claims for compensation based on it.
See Dan River Mills, Inc. v. Foshee,
Second, because Dan River operated a medical department, it had “a duty to disclose (or have its medical department disclose) a condition which its medical staff has determined to exist or which the staff in exercise of reasonable care should have diagnosed.”
Belser v. American Cast Iron Pipe Co., Inc.,
Third, the cotton workers’ circumstances, including their education, are relevant in determining whether they had reason to understand the nature and gravity of their condition and its relation to their employment.
See Belser v. American Cast Iron Pipe Co., Inc.,
*1218 The court considers the individual evidence according to these findings and principles.
Lonnie Hilliard
The evidence reflects first that Dan River knew that Hilliard suffered lung disease, of which a significant cause was exposure to cotton dust. Dan River’s doctor in Birmingham could not rule out this diagnosis. Dan River also had results of tests by its medical department.
Furthermore, Dan River knew or should have known that Hilliard did not know of his disease. Although first noticing breathing difficulty in the early 1970’s, Hilliard continued to work for several years. Dan River was aware of this. It also knew that Hilliard had very little education and understanding. His continued ignorance of his condition was obvious at trial.
While Hilliard said that, after visiting Birmingham, he had “some idea” that his breathing difficulty was related to his work, he did not “know of his disease” even at the time of trial. More than a confused and uninformed suspicion is required to warrant barring a claim if the “construction of the limitations provisions of the workmen’s compensation law is in accordance with the well recognized rule that the workmen’s compensation law must be liberally construed in furtherance of its beneficent and humanitarian purposes.”
Ex Parte Youngblood,
Similarly, the court finds that Hilliard did not have reason to understand either the nature and gravity of his disease or its relation to his employment. His circumstances were such that he required a clear explanation to achieve such understanding. He had worked at Dan River from the age of fourteen with only a brief interruption. He had only a second-grade education and could not read or write. Again, his confusion and incomprehension regarding even simple matters were readily apparent. Hilliard did not receive the explanation he reasonably required.
The evidence shows that it was not enough for Dan River to give Hilliard a copy of the medical report prepared by its doctor in Birmingham. From the court’s own observation, this complex report would be intelligible only to those trained in the sciences dealing with such disease as cotton dust causes. Dan River was aware that most of its employees were illiterate or semi-literate. Dan River also knew that it had a legal obligation to make the contents of the reports known to its diseased employees. Belser, supra. Dan River therefore gave the technical report, unexplained, to its uneducated, diseased employees with the hope of discharging its legal obligation while at the same time effectively keeping its diseased employees unaware of the true nature, gravity, and cause of their disease. The giving of the doctor’s reports was an empty, indeed fraudulent, gesture designed solely to protect Dan River rather than its employees.
Also, it was not enough to send the report to Hilliard’s doctor. Dan River made no serious effort to assure that those doctors who received the reports about their diseased patients understood the significance of the technical report or that they made the contents and significance of the reports known to their patients in an understandable manner. Also, Hilliard cannot be faulted for any inaction by his doctor. Therefore, Dan River fraudulently concealed from Hilliard the truth of the facts on which its liability depends.
Alternatively, the court finds that Dan River was primarily responsible for Hilliard’s delay in filing his claim and thus committed false representation. Over the years, Dan River developed a relationship of trust with its employees. By its actions, Dan River led them to believe that it would specifically protect them from the health hazards caused by their employment. As stated, the company took specific steps to monitor its employees’ health. Under these circumstances, Hilliard reasonably relied on Dan River to bring to his attention risks posed by his employment and, if necessary, to take appropriate steps to protect him from such risks. Dan River failed to *1219 do this. At no time did Dan River take specific, affirmative steps to assure that Hilliard was no longer exposed to the harm of cotton dust, or that Hilliard’s continued exposure was with his complete understanding of the known risks to his health.
Dan River also failed to disclose to Hilliard the nature and extent of his disease. After taking him into its trust, Dan River at no time warned him in clear and adequate terms that he was a diseased employee, even though, as this court has found, Dan River knew or should have known of his diseased state. Hilliard’s claim is thus timely.
Zack Schofield
The evidence reflects that Dan River knew that Schofield also suffers lung disease, of which a significant cause was exposure to cotton dust. Again, this was a diagnosis that Dan River’s doctor in Birmingham could not exclude, and Dan River had other tests results, too.
Dan River also knew or should have known that Schofield did not know of his disease. As Dan River was aware, Schofield began experiencing breathing difficulty in the mid-1970’s, yet continued to work. The company also knew that he had little education and understanding, and remains confused about his condition.
Dan River contends that Schofield showed understanding of his condition when he asked a lawyer retained to obtain workers’ compensation benefits for a knee injury whether he could file a claim for his breathing problems; the lawyer apparently told him that he could not. That an employee consults a lawyer is a factor in whether the employer is primarily responsible for the employee’s delay in filing a claim.
Mayes v. Dake,
Similarly, the court finds that Schofield did not have reason to understand either the nature and gravity of his disease or its relation to his employment. His circumstances were such that he too required a clear explanation. He first worked at the Greenville mill at the age of sixteen and then returned after working elsewhere. He is unable to read or write. Again, his confusion and incomprehension are obvious. Schofield did not receive the explanation he reasonably required to understand his condition.
The evidence also reflects that Dan River failed to disclose to Schofield the nature and extent of his disease. Again, giving him or his doctor a copy of the report by its doctor in Birmingham was insufficient. Therefore, Dan River fraudulently concealed from Schofield the truth of the facts on which its liability depends. Alternatively, the court finds, for the same reasons given above regarding Hilliard, that Dan River was primarily responsible for Schofield’s delay in filing his claim and thus committed false representation. Schofield’s claim is thus timely.
Dan River also contends that Schofield’s claim is barred by a release he signed settling a claim against Dan River for a knee injury. Such a release “if unambiguous in meaning, will be given effect according to the intention of the parties to be judged by the court from what appears within the four corners of the instrument itself____”
Finley v. Liberty Mutual Insurance Co.,
Here, the release simply referred generally to the petition filed by the parties.
*1220
Therefore, the surrounding circumstances may help to determine the intention of the parties.
See Rivers v. Oakwood College,
Alternatively, the court finds that, even were the release binding, Schofield is entitled to relief from it. In
Fabarc Steel Supply, Inc. v. Davis,
Eunice McCoy
The evidence reflects that Dan River should have known that McCoy suffers lung disease, of which a significant cause was exposure to cotton dust, even if it did not actually know this. McCoy first noticed breathing difficulty in the early 1970’s. Dan River began monitoring her health in the late 1970’s. However, its medical department gave her only questionnaires and simple breathing tests, while other employees received more tests from Dan River’s doctor in Birmingham. The evidence is that these additional tests are necessary to identify lung disease caused by exposure to cotton dust. In failing to give McCoy such tests, especially while giving them to other employees, Dan River breached the applicable standard of due care.
Dan River contends that it failed to give McCoy these examinations because she did not disclose some of her symptoms, apparently due to her impression that health problems might lead to termination of her employment. The court cannot say that this impression was unreasonable even if it was inaccurate. More significantly, the evidence is that McCoy did disclose her symptoms on some occasions and, in any event, Dan River also conducted tests that did not depend on her confidence and frankness. Dan River should have conducted more such tests.
Thus, Dan River’s contention that McCoy should be estopped from relying on tolling of the statute of limitations lacks merit. Estoppel arises when one takes inconsistent positions in different instances to another’s reliance and prejudice.
United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v. McKinnon,
The evidence also reflects that Dan River knew or should have known that McCoy did not know of her disease. She too first noticed breathing difficulty in the early 1970’s, yet continued to work. Dan River knew or should have known of this. It *1221 certainly knew that she had little understanding about her condition, if more education than the others. McCoy’s confusion and incomprehension were most apparent of all.
Similarly, the court finds that McCoy did not have reason to understand either the nature and gravity of her disease or its relation to her employment. The evidence also reflects that Dan River failed to disclose to McCoy the nature and extent of her disease.
Therefore, Dan River fraudulently concealed from McCoy the truth of the facts on which its liability depends. Alternatively, the court finds, that Dan River was primarily responsible for McCoy’s delay in filing her claim and thus committed false representation. McCoy’s claim is thus timely.
Clifton Smith
Dan River also contends that Smith’s claim is barred by the statute of limitations. Smith does not rely on tolling of the limitation, but rather contends that he filed his claim within one year of the last day of his exposure.
It is undisputed that Smith’s last day of work was October 26, 1982, and that he filed his claim on October 26, 1983. However, Dan River offered evidence that production in the card room where Smith worked stopped on October 21, 1982. Even if true, however, this does not mean that Smith’s exposure to cotton dust stopped on that day.
The evidence is that cotton dust remains in the work environment during and after production. It settles on machinery where it must be blown off; it floats in the air where levels are monitored. Furthermore, the card room is one of the dustiest areas in the mill, and dust may also enter the card room from other areas. Thus, the end of production in the card room did not stop Smith’s exposure to cotton dust.
There is also no evidence that Smith was confined to the card room for the last five days he worked. Any passage through areas of the mill where production continued also exposed him to cotton dust. On this basis, the court finds that Smith was exposed to cotton dust within the limitation period, so his claim is not barred.
V.
Also before the court is plaintiff Lonnie Hilliard’s counsel’s motion for court to enter judgment nunc pro tunc. For the reasons that follow, the court concludes that the motion should be granted.
Hilliard brought this action against Dan River on December 20, 1983. The trial of this cause lasted from October 10 until October 15, 1984. The court set the cause for submission of the parties’ post-trial briefs on November 8, 1984, and extended this date until November 16, 1984, when the court took the cause under submission. On April 6,1985, Hilliard died. On May 15, 1985, Hilliard’s counsel filed the motion for judgment nunc pro tunc.
Judgment nunc pro tunc is a judgment given effect as of a date in the past. See 6A Moore’s Federal Practice § 58.08 (2d ed.) at 58-75. “The Latin phrase ‘nunc pro tunc’ literally means ‘now for then.’ ” Id. Here, Hilliard’s counsel seeks a judgment in Hilliard’s favor as of the date this cause was submitted to the court.
The first issue for the court is what doctrine of judgment nunc pro tunc to apply. This is a diversity action, so the court must follow the substantive law of Alabama.
Erie Railroad Co. v. Tompkins,
Here, the court concludes first that it need not determine whether Alabama or federal law applies because the two are identical. However, assuming that the two differ, the court concludes that it must follow federal law. The court explains these two conclusions in turn.
*1222 A.
There are at least two distinct varieties of judgments nunc pro tunc: those to correct errors in a judgment already entered; and those to protect parties from the court’s delay in entering judgment during which a party has died. 6A
Moore’s Federal Practice
§ 58.08 (2d ed.) at 58-76. Federal law recognizes both these varieties of judgments nunc pro tunc.
Cuebas Y Arredondo v. Cuebas Y Arredondo,
These two varieties of judgments nunc pro tunc have appropriately different prerequisites. Thus, judgment nunc pro tunc to correct an error or omission requires that the court have made some prior indication of its ruling.
Recile v. Ward,
A court's power to enter judgment nunc pro tunc where a party has died derives
from Anglo-American common law, symbolized by the maxim, “the act of the court shall prejudice no one.”
See
46 Am.Jur.2d,
Judgments
§§ 97-105; 49 Corpus Juris Secundum § 118; 3 American Law Reports 1403. “The rule established by the general concurrence of the American and English courts is, that where the delay in rendering a judgment or decree arises from the act of the court, that is, where the delay has been caused either for its convenience, or by the multiplicity or press of business, either the intricacy of the questions involved, or of any other cause not attributable to the laches of the parties, the judgment or decree may be entered retrospectively, as of a time when it should or might have been entered up.”
Mitchell v. Overman,
103 U.S. (13 Otto) 62, 64-65,
The requirements of judgment nunc pro tunc at common law are: that the cause be ripe for judgment when the party dies; that the delay in judgment not be the fault of the prevailing party; and that innocent third persons acquiring rights since the death of the party will not be injured. 46 Am.Jur.2d
Judgments
§§ 97 & 98. The U.S. Supreme Court has followed these requirements and granted judgment nunc pro tunc on numerous occasions.
Harris v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue,
*1223
There is no indication that the law of Alabama is any different from federal common law in this regard. By statute, Alabama has adopted the “common law of England, so far as it is not inconsistent with the Constitution, laws and institutions of this state____” 1975 Ala.Code § 1-3-1. The parties have submitted no authority indicating that Alabama has departed from the common law doctrine of judgment nunc pro tunc, nor is the court aware of any such authority. To the contrary, in
Birmingham Railway, Light & Power Co. v. Cunningham,
B.
Dan River contends that entering judgment nunc pro tunc in favor of Hilliard would contravene a rule of Alabama’s workers’ compensation law that the right to benefits survives the death of a claimant only if the cause of death is job related. Although this contention ignores Alabama’s application of the doctrine of judgment nunc pro tunc to protect parties from delay when a party has died, the court nevertheless treats it as an argument that such application is not well established and that the court should follow established Alabama workers’ compensation law rather than federal common law of judgment nunc pro tunc. According to the rule of
Erie Railroad Company v. Tompkins,
Again, the Erie rule requires a federal court with diversity jurisdiction to follow state law on issues of substance, but not on other issues. See C. Wright, A. Miller & E. Cooper Federal Practice and Procedure: Jurisdiction § 4501. In guiding courts on which law to follow, the U.S. Supreme Court has relied on several considerations, including distinguishing substantive and procedural rules, determining how rules affect outcome, looking to federal policy and avoiding inequitable administration of the law. See id. § 4504.
Recently, in
Sibaja v. Dow Chemical Corp.,
In
Southern v. Plumb Tools,
The Alabama rule at issue here, according to Dan River’s contention, provides that survivors of a deceased plaintiff seeking workers’ compensation benefits may maintain the claim only if the job-related injury caused the death. The Alabama Court of Civil Appeals set forth this rule in
Smith v. West Point-Pepperell, Inc.,
The court here would note first that the rule set forth in
Smith v. West PointPepperell, Inc.
is not directly applicable. In
Smith,
the plaintiff had died after filing a complaint for workers’ compensation benefits but before his case was submitted to the court.
Additionally, the court in
Smith v. West Point-Pepperell, Inc.
identified no policy or principle underlying its result but relied only on “the plain language of the statute.”
The common law doctrine of judgment nunc pro tunc, over which Dan River would have the court follow Alabama’s survival rule, contrastingly rests on important principles to which this court is beholding. Again, the doctrine derives from the maxim that the act of the court should prejudice no one. This maxim has more than historic value. The doctrine of judgment nunc pro tunc, like the doctrine of forum non conveniens, would seem a manifestation of “the equitable powers of the courts of law over their own processes, to prevent abuses, oppression and injustice.”
Gumbel v. Pitkin,
As in
Sibaja,
it is not determinative that application of the doctrine of judgment nunc pro tunc alters the outcome here.
For this reason, the issue here is unlike that in
Southern v. Plumb Tools,
However, the court also has a concern that there may be a stronger interest here in applying the judgment nunc pro tunc doctrine. In
Logan v. Zimmerman Brush Co.,
Here, as in
Logan,
the issue is one of procedure, not substance.
As in
Logan,
a claimant for workers’ compensation benefits would appear to have a protected interest in the claim,
The court’s conclusion that the
Erie
rule requires applying the doctrine of judgment nunc pro tunc is bolstered by the decision of the Ninth Circuit in
Venable v. Meyers,
For these reasons, the court concludes that it should follow the doctrine of judgment nunc pro tunc, derived from common law, followed by federal and Alabama courts and required by the Erie rule.
C.
Again, entry of judgment nunc pro tunc requires the following: that the cause be ripe for judgment when the party dies; that the delay in judgment not be the fault of the prevailing party; and that innocent third persons acquiring rights since the death of the party will not be injured. 46 Am.Jur.2d Judgments §§ 97 & 98.
Here, the court took Hilliard’s complaint under submission on November 16, 1984. Hilliard in no way caused delay in entry of judgment. When he died on April 6, 1985, this cause was ripe for judgment. Finally, there is no evidence that any third parties will be injured as a result of entry of judgment in favor of Hilliard. On this basis, Hilliard’s motion for the court to enter judgment nunc pro tunc is due to be granted.
Appropriate judgments will be entered.
Notes
. The cotton workers claim that they suffer, not only an "occupational pneumoconiosis,” but also an “occupational disease,” the subject of Article 4, 1975 Ala.Code §§ 25-5-110 through 25-5-123. It would appear that these are necessarily alternative claims.
See Dover Mills, Inc. v. Garrett,
. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration has defined this dust for purposes of regulating exposure in cotton textile mills as follows: "Any dust present during the handling and processing of cotton through the weaving or knitting of fabrics, and dust present in other operations or manufacturing processes using new or waste cotton fibers or cotton fiber byproducts from textile mills is cotton dust.” 29 C.F.R. § 1910.1043(b). The evidence reflects that this is an accurate and useful definition, and the court adopts it.
. The permanent lung disease caused by exposure to cotton dust is called variously byssinosis, brown lung disease and cotton textile worker's disease.
. Dan River contends that the harmful component of the cotton plant is "respirable cotton trash dust” and that the cotton workers were not exposed to such dust. In light of the court’s general attribution of the cause of lung disease, the court need not determine whether the cotton workers were exposed to such dust and whether or how this differs from cotton dust as previously defined.
It should be added that the Occupational Safety and Health Administration has also adopted a general rather than specific approach to the causes of the adverse effects of cotton dust. See note 2, supra.
. The decisions of Alabama courts do not show any different standards for causation among the various categories of compensable injuries or diseases. § 25-5-152 states that "[a]II the provisions of articles 1, 2, 3 and 8 of this Chapter, except section 25-5-78 [regarding notice of an accident], shall be applicable to this article, unless otherwise provided or inconsistent herewith."
. Dan River does not contend, nor apparently could it, that it cannot be liable for the extent to which the cotton workers’ disabilities may have been caused by cigarette smoking. As stated, smoking and exposure to cotton dust both contribute to lung disease. However, according to § 25-5-58, liability may be apportioned only among different diseases, not among different causes of a disease. See 2 A. Larson The Law of Workmen’s Compensation § 59.22.
. Dan River has agreed with Middleton and Schofield on their final rates of compensation. With Hilliard and Smith, it agrees on their average weekly earnings, but disputes their maximum weekly benefits allowable. According to 1975 Ala.Code § 25-5-68, the maximum weekly benefit allowable is two-thirds of the state’s average weekly wage in effect on the date of their last exposure to cotton dust, and this "shall be applicable for the full period during which compensation is payable." The court finds that the maximum weekly benefits allowable for Hilliard and Smith respectively are $148 and $174.
Dan River and McCoy dispute her average weekly earnings for the 52 weeks before she last worked at Dan River. The court credits Dan River's records and finds that McCoy’s earnings were $155.43. Two-thirds of this amount produces McCoy's final rate of compensation.
. Alabama’s workers’ compensation law was modeled after Minnesota’s law, and the Alabama Supreme Court has held that Minnesota’s courts’ construction of its law is of persuasive value to Alabama's courts.
Gold Kist, Inc. v. Barnett,
. In Smith v. West Point-Pepperell, Inc., the facts did not give the court an opportunity to weigh such federal constitutional considerations against its workers’ compensation survival rule. No other Alabama court has apparently had this opportunity either.
